Sense 4.0 on top of Android 4.0 ICS just makes sense

The HTC One X for AT&T comes with Android 4.0.3 and Sense 4.0 - both the latest and greatest Google and HTC have to offer. We've already seen those in action on the One S, but One X for AT&T offers even smoother performance and higher resolution. There are no surprises though, nothing exclusive on the One X for AT&T that is not present on the One S as well. Still we are going to explore the Android/Sense combo once again for you.

You've already heard about the new screen - it's really awesome and the OS and the Sense UI look even better on its HD resolution than on the One S's qHD. The One X for AT&T offers probably the best smartphone experience to date - both visual and functional.

Here's a demo video to get you started:

HTC are famous for their deep customizations of the interface of the host OS and the latest version of Sense is no exception, though the Taiwanese have taken user feedback to heart and worked hard to provide a much more unobtrusive experience.

The brilliant lockscreen has been further improved, sealing its position as the most functional, most customizable lockscreen on a smartphone. By default, it has four shortcuts and a ring at the bottom. You drag the ring towards the center of the screen to unlock the phone.

Or, you can drag any of the shortcuts into the ring to unlock the phone and launch the corresponding app. You can assign any four apps to the lockscreen.

The new lockscreen is brilliant

But that's not the end of it - the HTC One X for AT&T comes with eight different lockscreens preinstalled. You can access the others from the Personalize menu.

You get all the old ones - a photo album, Friend Stream, Weather, clock and stocks.

There are two new additions though and they're much more functional. The first is called Productivity and lists the latest missed calls, texts, emails and scheduled events.

The second one is People - you pick a group from your phonebook and a rectangular grid of their contact images will pop up on the lockscreen. Grab one of them and drop them on the ring to view their details. You can have more than one page of contacts too.

The two new preloaded lockscreens

If you're using the music player, the playback controls show up on the lockscreen (as usual), and you can drag that onto the ring to jump straight into the music player too.

Unfortunately, you can't download new lockscreens off the HTC Hub.

HTC have done a lot to streamline the lockscreen and the same goes for the homescreen. Gone is the scrolling indicator arc, gone is the three button dock that wasn't very useful.

You get an auto-hiding indicator of which screen you're on and a brand new dock with five shortcuts - the middle one is locked to the app drawer, while the other four can be customized as you please (you can even put a folder there, if four shortcuts isn't enough).

Some of the homescreen sections

Leap view is still here - tap the home key (while on the default homescreen) or do a pinch gesture to zoom out (with an awesome animation) to display the thumbnails of all seven homescreen panes at once. Upon a press and hold you can drag to reposition the homescreen panes. A small "home" icon indicates the default homescreen.

You can have as many as seven homescreens - and with all the excellent preloaded widgets, you might want to keep all of them.

Leap View lets you quickly rearrange homescreen panes

One of the biggest complaints was that the Personalize button was just taking up space in the dock at the bottom of the screen. And it was - it has since been moved to the app drawer, but it still offers plenty of customization options.

An access to the proprietary Scenes is one of them - essentially five custom homescreen setups (Work, Travel, Social, Play and default). Each scene changes the wallpaper and the set of widgets. For instance, the Work scene has a Stocks widget, while the Social offers a Twitter widget. Those can be customized, of course, and you can download new ones.

Switching between scenes takes a couple of seconds, but they're a handy feature if you use your One X for AT&T as both work and personal phone.

Preset scenes • The scenes in action

The HTC Sense has another customization option called Skins. Every skin changes the look and feel of most of the onscreen buttons, application screens, option menus, and other items. They also come with unique wallpaper each and use different colors for various UI elements.

The main menu has the typical grid layout, which is composed of horizontal pages with shortcuts sorted alphabetically. You can set different sorting options - alphabetical, most recent or oldest - but you can't rearrange them manually. There are Search and Play Store shortcuts along with a menu for some options.

The new app drawer

The main menu has a tabbed layout similar to different Sense elements (such as the phonebook). There are three tabs available at the bottom - All apps, Frequent and Downloads. You can rearrange them or remove Frequent and Downloads if you don't need them.

The Personalize app also has Sound customizations - you can pick a Sound set or individual ringtone, notification and alarm sounds.

The Personalize menu does Sound too

Adding widgets to the homescreen is done in similar fashion to Honeycomb and is one of the less successful changes.

You press and hold on the homescreen and everything zooms out so that the homescreen panes are visible as thumbnails on the top row of the screen. You tap a homescreen to select it and then select a widget to add to it (or you can just drag the widget).

Adding a widget to the homescreen

There's a search option to speed things along or you can choose a widget from the dropdown menu and then select which size you like, but that still feels like an extra step.

The old setup of picking a widget and then picking the size (if any) seemed simpler.

Editing the homescreen is different from vanilla Android. You can tap and hold on a widget and you can drag across homescreen panes. While you're dragging a widget (or shortcut or whatever), two "buttons" appear at the top of the screen - Edit and Remove. You drop the widget on either button to perform the corresponding action.

Edit can be used to modify the settings of a widget - e.g. choose a different folder for the Photo Frame album or even choose a different version of the Clock widget. This saves you the trouble of first deleting a widget and then putting it on the screen again to choose a different version, setting and so on.

The second "button" is Remove, which deletes the widget as expected.

Dragging a widget gives you options

The notification area no longer has the list of recent apps - it's all available to notifications only. No more tabs and toggles either - you get a Settings shortcut here if you need to power something on or off. There's also a Clear button to dismiss all notification or you can swipe them off one by one.

The notification area has been significantly de-cluttered

HTC have remodeled the app switching interface - screenshots are displayed of the running apps, turned slightly to the side. They're ordered horizontally (instead of vertically as is the ICS standard) and you can swipe up to remove them. The not so-good news is that you can only see three of them at a time, even in landscape mode - a waste of screen estate.

You get the old task manager too. It's simple to use - each running app is listed with an indication of how much RAM it's using (no CPU usage reading though). You can terminate apps one by one and there's a Kill All button too.

HTC's task switcher and task manager

Synthetic benchmarks

If you already read our HTC One S review, you already know what to expect here. The Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 in the HTC One X for AT&T is just as solid a performer. Due to its newer architecture, it outclasses the Tegra 3 chipset of the global version on more than one occasion.

The Benchmark Pi result of the One X for AT&T is the best we've seen to date. Linpack tested in multi-threaded mode on the other hand, showed that two Krait cores outdo the Tegra 3 quartet.

Benchmark Pi

Lower is better

HTC One X (Snapdragon S4)279

HTC One X (Tegra 3)338

HTC One S306

Samsung Galaxy S III344

Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1351

Samsung Galaxy Nexus408

Samsung Galaxy S II452

Sony Xperia S536

HTC Sensation XE583

Linpack

Higher is better

HTC One X (Snapdragon S4)196

HTC One X (Tegra 3)126.1

HTC One S210

Samsung Galaxy S III177.1

Samsung Galaxy Note 10.190

Sony Xperia S86.4

Samsung Galaxy S II77.6

Samsung Galaxy Nexus77.1

HTC Sensation XE50.4

The 3D graphics department is handled by Qualcomm's Adreno 225 GPU. Unsurprisingly, the One X for AT&T posted a score which was in line with its Snapdragon packing relative - the One S.

NenaMark 2

Higher is better

HTC One X (Snapdragon S4)55.9

HTC One X (Tegra 3)47.5

HTC One S60.5

Samsung Galaxy S III58.8

Samsung Galaxy S II51.6

Samsung Galaxy Note 10.143.6

Sony Xperia S37.5

Samsung Galaxy Nexus24

HTC Sensation XE23

On SunSpider, the CPU-stressing JavaScript benchmark, the HTC One X for AT&T posted a slightly slower result than the Tegra 3 sporting global version. The same goes for the Browsermark test.

SunSpider

Lower is better

HTC One X (Snapdragon S4)1834

HTC One X (Tegra 3)1757

Samsung Galaxy S III1447

HTC One S1708

New Apple iPad1722

Samsung Galaxy S II1849

Samsung Galaxy Nexus1863

Samsung Galaxy Note 10.11891

Apple iPhone 4S2217

Sony Xperia S2587

HTC Sensation XE4404

BrowserMark

Higher is better

HTC One X (Snapdragon S4)92232

HTC One X (Tegra 3)96803

Samsung Galaxy S III169811

Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1113256

Samsung Galaxy S II111853

Samsung Galaxy Nexus103591

New Apple iPad103264

HTC One S98435

Apple iPhone 4S88725

Sony Xperia S74990

HTC Sensation XE72498

The HTC One X for AT&T is certainly one of fastest phones currently on the market - there's no test in the mobile world it can't pass with flying colors. The Snapdragon S4 equipped version also clearly shows that there's more to performance than just the sheer number of CPU cores.